Group show at NSA Gallery, Durban, Iziko: South African National Gallery. 2004
Date: 15 June, 2004 until 11 July, 2004
Curator: Zayd Minty
“… this show is what it is, a culmination of a set of experiences presenting another point of reference for ongoing engagements around the exploration of diasporic identities and diversity politics - as a visual project it has few precedents since the country adopted new democratic and cultural policies and is thus a unique initiative.
The show was an opportunity to present to South Asian audiences some recent perspectives from the world of contemporary arts and to exhibit a range of exciting artists whose visions I admire and whose imagery I find beautiful and engaging. My framing of the project, facilitated with a range of independent views of these artists. is an attempt, I hope, to engage South African audiences, especially those of South Asian/”Indian” descent, with something which could firstly stand by itself for its aesthetic qualities and secondly to serve as a springboard for a multitude of discussions about identity and transformation. My own view of ‘Indians’ in South Africa is an ambiguous one with the “crisis” of the majority of ‘Indians’ in the face of change in the New South Africa, worrying. Exhibiting artists who provide other more progressive visions and perspectives, critically engaging with notions of identity is an opportunity I hope for transformation/s of some sort.”
From the catalogue ‘Introduction and Acknowledgements’ by Zayd Minty, May 2004.
Catalogue relating to an exhibition, 2004
Born, 1971 in Karachi, Pakistan
Born, 1945 in Durban, South Africa
Born, 1965 in Calcutta, India
Cape Town, South Africa
Durban, South Africa